I'm up for renewal too...... waiting on tax return. Also having trouble with the site..... as usual!!
But I haven't seen the "new" renewal price either.... hopefully that didn't go up... or if it did, hopefully less than $20! With last years increase it's gotten way too expensive!
3. If it is true that third-party reseller tickets will continue to be price-bridged, and it is also true that expired tickets retain their value towards the purchase of a new ticket, then it follows that an expired ticket purchased from a reseller should be exchangeable for the same ticket at zero cost (at least as long as the same ticket is still available for purchase - and if it's not, I'm not sure how they bridge it). Thoughts?
[THEORETICAL] Once the resellers start selling these new, expiration dated tickets, I suspect the bridging math may change somewhat. I imagine they'd be able to use that expiration date against their records to know what the at-gate value of the ticket was at the time it was made, and that would be your starting point for bridging. That seems to be similar to what they will do when you exchange an unused, expired ticket going forward, so I could see similar logic applying to bridging. I don't imagine we will know for sure until the next price increase.
[THEORETICAL] Once the resellers start selling these new, expiration dated tickets, I suspect the bridging math may change somewhat. I imagine they'd be able to use that expiration date against their records to know what the at-gate value of the ticket was at the time it was made, and that would be your starting point for bridging. That seems to be similar to what they will do when you exchange an unused, expired ticket going forward, so I could see similar logic applying to bridging. I don't imagine we will know for sure until the next price increase.
Thanks! But I just checked and my renewal price went up $29 from last year!The price of all AP's went up including renewals. Tell me what pass you have and I'll tell you the renewal
They ALWAYS know what the gate price was on the date the ticket was sold.
(Or during a range of dates.)
That is not affected by the new "expiration dates."
What they DON'T know is what the Guest paid the reseller on the date that the ticket was sold.
That is the reason behind the price-bridge.
Thanks! But I just checked and my renewal price went up $29 from last year!With tax.... last year I pd $676 and now it prices out at $705.
They ALWAYS know what the gate price was on the date the ticket was sold.
(Or during a range of dates.)
That is not affected by the new "expiration dates."
What they DON'T know is what the Guest paid the reseller on the date that the ticket was sold.
That is the reason behind the price-bridge.
Thanks! But I just checked and my renewal price went up $29 from last year!With tax.... last year I pd $676 and now it prices out at $705.
It would be calculated in the same manner as at WDW. Value of the expired ticket applied towards the new DL ticket.Does anyone know how this currently works at Disneyland?
ie. If I take an unused, expired reseller-purchased DL ticket to the gate and ask for a new ticket of the same duration and with the same options, what (if anything) would that cost?
Is this the renewal cost now for the Platinum pass?
It would be calculated in the same manner as at WDW. Value of the expired ticket applied towards the new DL ticket.
But what's the "value" of the expired ticket? Current gate price? Gate price at the time the ticket expired? The price the reseller paid Disney (less likely)?
If they use current gate price, great! That basically opens a loophole to avoid the whole expiry issue. I buy a ticket from a reseller now for some hypothetical future trip, let it expire, and when I finally get around to taking my trip, I trade it for a new ticket at zero net cost. Yay! It's just like having a non-expiring ticket.
But that seems too easy. The idea that they'll use price at the time the ticket expired seems far more likely. I retain the benefit of whatever discount was offered by the reseller at the time, but I don't get to hedge against price increases indefinitely.
Presumably this is a solved problem, since they already do it at DL.
I've been reading up on this way more than I should be. I'm still confused.
From what I understand - if you purchased the ticket for $400 and don't use it, then 5 years later you go to Disney and wish to revive the ticket, but the same ticket you bought now costs $450, it'll be $50 to revive that ticket.
... I think.
I've been reading up on this way more than I should be. I'm still confused.
From what I understand - if you purchased the ticket for $400 and don't use it, then 5 years later you go to Disney and wish to revive the ticket, but the same ticket you bought now costs $450, it'll be $50 to revive that ticket.
... I think.